20 BRITISH BUTTERFLIES. 



perfect and last stage of insect life, and La applied to aU 

 insects with wings for it must be borne in mind thai 

 no insect is ever winged till it reaches the last stago of 

 its existence. 



If the progressive development of these lovely 

 Jjeings is so marvellous, no less so is their structure 

 when perfected, and of this some general description 

 must now be attempted. 



In contemplating a butterfly, one feels that the mind 

 is first engaged by that ample spread, and exquisite 

 painting of the wings that form the creature's glory; 

 let therefore these remarkable organs have our first 

 attention. 



Wherein do these wings chiefly differ from all other 

 insect wings ? Certainly in being covered thickly with 

 a variously coloured powdery material, easily removed 

 by handling. This apparent dust is composed, in 

 reality, of a vast number of regularly and beautifully 

 formed scales feathers they are sometimes called, but 

 they are more comparable to fish scales than to any 

 ?ther kind of natural covering. The general term 

 Lepidoptera, applied to all butterflies and moths, is 

 derived from these scaly-wings ; Lepis 1 being the Greek 

 for a scale, and ptera meaning wings in the same lan- 

 guage. 



The use of a tolerably powerful pocket lens will af- 

 ford some insight into the exquisite mode of painting 



3 Making tcphtcs if genitive. 



